Home > Books & Magazines > Printed Book >

Reviews for Nanny - Melissa Nathan


MagdaDH does read chick lit after all -  Nanny  -  Melissa Nathan Printed Book
amazon
Nanny - Melissa Nathan 

Newest Review: ... always laughing. It's a great book, but to be honest with you it doesn' really relate of our job/day. Yes, there are lots of funny moments... more

MagdaDH does read chick lit after all (Nanny - Melissa Nathan)

MagdaDH

Member Name: MagdaDH

Product:

Nanny - Melissa Nathan

Date: 21/11/05 (157 review reads)
Rating:

Advantages: funny, engaging, likable heroine, well observed children, competently written

Disadvantages: a rom-com after all

In order to keep enough variety in my book reviews and to ward off any accusations (or compliments?) relating to my supposed snobbery in literary matters I thought it would be a good idea to review a book from a genre that is often thought to be the epitome of easy-read, badly written, shallow entertainment. You know, these books with colourful covers drawn in `bang-on-the-door` or `groovy-chick` style. Oh, yes. The chick-lit.

Melissa Nathan wrote a couple of (pretty dire) Jane Austen inspired books before (it`s all Bridget`s fault anyway) while "Nanny" uses more of the Jane Eyre model (albeit very loosely); with a sprinkling of Mary Poppins too.

Jo is a 23 year old nanny who lives with her parents in a small town called Niblet-upon-Avon, has a beautiful builder-boyfriend called Shaun (whom she persistently refuses to marry) and group of close friends with whom she shares banter and pub outings. She also feels stifled, bored, needing to break out and break free. An ad in "Lady" provides direction: and Jo goes to London to become a nanny to three children of Dick and Vanessa; complete with her own suite of rooms in a beautifully-decorated Highgate house and exclusive use of Renault Clio.

Adapting to the new environment is not easy, the family she works for provides a formidable challenge indeed and the distance doesn't really make her heart grow fonder of Shaun. As the story progresses, Jo learns how to deal with the kids and the parents, finds friends and potential boyfriends and meets a rather fetchingly brooding accountant named Josh who happens to be Dick's son from the previous relationship. Eventually she even unpacks her rucksack (many many weeks after coming to London for the first time).

That is all you are getting from me plot-wise (quite a lot by usual magdadh standards anyway); and there is quite a few plots and sub-plots in "Nanny" in a true proper-novel manner: we have Jo's family, romantic and work/study developments; we have the stormy patch in her employers' marriage; we have the school bully story involving one of the children; we have the issues concerning the relationships between the children of the same father from different mothers.

All of these stories are told in an entertaining, engaging way, with humour mostly warm but occasionally scathing, with humanity and sympathy, in a language that it simple but doesn't grate or jar, in a style that is colloquial and far from a pinnacle of literary artistry but doesn't make one's jaws clench in pain either.

"Nanny" is a great example of a gentle, well executed entertainment; a rom-com (a book like that has to be rom-something to appeal to its target audience) but with added bonuses that make it attractive to a wider readership and place the book a cut above your standard chick-lit of the Jane Mansell or Sophie Kinsella ilk (and it is decidedly better written than those).

The heroine is sympathetic and intelligent and carries the novel well. Jo's story is essentially about finding her own way: working out what her real values are and then having enough guts to follow them. After all, at 16 she wanted to be an anthropologist.

Vanessa's and Dick's marriage provides a lot of "Nanny's" laughs; but also presents a good look at the dilemmas faced by a career women who isn't necessarily cut out for full-time motherhood and feels guilty because of it; and a man that thrives in the domestic environment but feels compelled to be the family's provider (to which role he has no inclination whatsoever).

The social milieu is well observed, well described and well contrasted, in particular between Jo's parents' lifestyle versus her employers': the decor, the food, the attitudes are all there.

Melissa Nathan has a good ear for dialogue: her characters speak (to each other and to themselves) in the way that usually seems natural and often well observed. I didn't suffer this constant "Ohmygod, people DON'T speak like that" and I often smiled, especially at the sarcastic exchanges between Dick and Vanessa.

The biggest joy of "Nanny" were for me the parts related to children Jo was looking after: from the maliciously plotting 12-year olds that Cassie confronts to the behaviours of the 6 year old Zack enthralled by his older half-brother. My favourite was unquestionably little 4 year old Tallulah; I have a daughter of the same age and the speech and behaviour of an extremely precocious but also rather sensitive 4 year old was captured by the author with an accuracy which brought me chuckles of delight.

All in all, "Nanny" is one of the better light novels I have read in the last few months. It's competently written, well observed, engaging account of one clever young nanny finding her way in the world and (of course) finding where her true love (for the time being at least) lies. Accompanying plots involving children and their parents substantially broadens the novel's appeal. the laughs are gentle but frequent; a few topical issue are also touched upon in a light-hearted way, but still; and the children are well observed and described.

Recommended for female readers of 15+ who like chick-lit, family sagas or any combination of the two.

Sex is done but not described graphically and I recall a few instances of mild 'language'.

The book is available on Amazon for £6.99 and from the marketplace from the usual penny.

Summary: A readable chick lit with more than romance (and no shopping), the main character is not an idiot

Last members to rate this review:
(33 members total)

duncantorr%2Fjaggynettles%2FKukana%2FRichada%2Fmattygroves10%2Fcalypte%2F

View all 33 member ratings

Overall rating: Very useful

This review has been awarded a Crown.

See all newly Crowned Reviews

Last comments:
Kukana

- 01/12/05

I can't see myself buying something like this at full price (or even Amazon's discount), but if I see it in a charity shop I might give it a whirl. Sue
Richada

- 28/11/05

Niblet-upon Avon! Even I could not have made that one up! Unlike Lola, I'm glad to here that your reading matter is more diverse than at first we might have thought. Richard.
librelola

- 22/11/05

I much prefer your "supposed snob" reviews of "snob literature", whichever way you want to call it!!

View all 12 comments

Top